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SKC, any idea what say the top 10, 20, 30, 40 or 50 stocks on the ASX have returned (without including cyclical's like miners) vs the all ords for instance? I had a quick look yesterday when doing my reply above and the 9 stocks I mentioned outperformed the all ords by 2% over the last 12 months and thats ignoring dividends.
Yes I agree. And the fact that this hasn't been observed in the ASX means the active/passive probably hasn't quite hit the tipping point yet. However I think it's definitely happening in the Gold space where GDX/GDXJ are causing havoc and throwing relative valuations out of whack.
Yes this would be one way to take advantage... literally to go with the flow. However, if the passive dominance becomes a problem and whatever prevailed has to unwind... you would obviously act in the exact opposite manner.
Here's another great article on this issue.
http://www.barrons.com/articles/man-vs-machine-how-has-indexing-changed-the-market-1499491233
I bet if they made another 10 year bet immediately after this bet ends Buffett would most likely win again.
Haven't thought about this in much detail and haven't researched it at all, but I'm a bit cynical of this debate and the voices in the media/industry who benefit from pushing it.If passive dominance becomes a problem – what unwinds it and when?
Haven't thought about this in much detail and haven't researched it at all, but I'm a bit cynical of this debate and the voices in the media/industry who benefit from pushing it.
It's not like passive investment is going to completely cure 'human emotions' or de-couple the relationship between cashflow & long-term return. There's going to be booms and busts, and times where active will be more popular again and vice versa.
Probably a bit of hindsight bias in a lot of the 'expert arguments' because that always makes it easier to fit an agenda.
To achieve 2) he specifiesBuffett knows (probably more than anyone), the study and effort it takes to be an active investor and beat the market over time, and he knows the "average person" isn't going to do that (hence why they want to pay hedge funds to do it for them).
So he recommends that the person not willing to put in the time and effort simply go the inactive route, because he believes the active route on average won't beat the market once the fees are taken out.
His recommendations are
1, Be active and put in the time and effort yourself
2, be passive and accept the market rate of return
he doesn't recommend 3
3, Be passive, but pay a high fee to some to be active on your behalf.
He explains it pretty well here, it goes back to Ben Graham,
If passive dominance becomes a problem – what unwinds it and when?
What unwinds it and when is always the question for an active market participant whenever he sees an opportunity to be on the other side of prevailing wisdom.
Absolutely, because if you don't do all three and you begin to try and "time the market", you are not taking a passive position.To achieve 2) he specifies
A (broad, low cost) index fund bought consistently over a long period of time.
All three elements are important.
Maybe not.
He’s saying he’s too old to collect on another bet but Berkshire is perpetual, so take that with a grain of salt.
That he doesn’t jump into renewing the bet now should tell you something about current valuation and the point SKC advances at least in USA.
Buffet wanted to show the attributes of passive to the market he is aiming the message at, but he didn't have the time to put all the attributes into place to make it a certainty. It takes a unique active manager to make a muppet of the other active managers whilst promoting passive investing.
To achieve 2) he specifies
A (broad, low cost) index fund bought consistently over a long period of time.
All three elements are important.
I find this passive / active investment discussion strange. Even the articles I'm reading don't actually outline the discussion.
Are people suggesting passive investment is bad because:
1. It's leading to higher valuations as retail investors pile in unaware of risks? or
2. It leads to some type of systematic risk within the system and ultimately financial meltdown as financial products behave outside of a way they were designed/expected to.
If the answer is 1 - I don't see a problem with this. Bull markets and bear markets happen and if retail investors are being drawn in at the wrong time this is completely standard behavior. If risk appetite was growing for active managers it would lead to increased P/E's anyway so for me this point is irrelevant.
If the discussion is point 2 then this is slightly more complex. Are people implying that ETF's make up such a large portion of the market that active / aggressive selling will lead to ETF selling and a self fulfilling prophecy? This just created volatility but the passive ETF is doing it's job. Perhaps slippage during hugely volatile times as they try to re balance could lead to under performance?
I think during hugely volatile times ETF's which aren't passive (aka derivative based or managed in such a way to provide exposure without holding the underlying) may be at risk but I'm not sure why passive ETF's which hold the underlying would be influenced (except simply being more volatile).
I think Buffet's bet was great, put simply, giving someone your money and asking them to manage it, along with a couple of other billion, whilst letting them take 1-2% a year fee, it's hugely unlikely they will beat the market.
This is great and what people need to realise. Constant re-investment, stick to a plan, don't panic.
"If you want to be hear for the good days, you've got be here for all the days"
"Everyone has a plan until they get punched in the face"
craft said: ↑
To achieve 2) he specifies
A (broad, low cost) index fund bought consistently over a long period of time.
All three elements are important.
Craft would the same concept of buying consistently over a long period of time not apply to active managed funds for a passive/"defensive" investor? Every fund active or passive will go through bad periods, so if we are talking about "the average person" I do not see how that changes. I remember reading somewhere that Magellan (in the U.S.) later did a study of investors who invested into the Magellan Fund when Peter Lynch was the fund manager. Over that roughly 13 year period where his funds produced something like 29% annualized returns, apparently the majority of his investors lost money investing in Magellan funds. Most likely because they had a short term time horizon and picked the wrong times to enter and exit the fund.
Craft, if after the conclusion of the bet another identical ten year bet started and you were forced to pick one side to bet on (lets say you placed a $10,000 bet) would you back Buffett or his opponent?
In regards to Buffett not jumping into renewing the bet, the current bet is not yet even officially over, lol. Besides he has already proved his point why would he need to prove it again? Also would his opponents take the same bet if it was offered again? I am going to say no.
In terms of hedged funds having the potential to outperform during a really weak market, the argument is nice in theory but in a typical ten year cycle you will usually have weak and strong periods. Yes if in the ten years immediately after the current bet ends we have one of these relatively uncommon ten year periods where returns are really low say 1 or 2% per annum compound, its possible.
That is the important point that Buffett would not necessarily win the bet in every single ten year period but in the vast majority he would.
Also I am not convinced that hedge funds always outperform during bear markets. If you look at what typical hedge funds might do aside from bottom up long stock picking, things like shorting, currency trading, derivatives, macro investing, etc lets address them all one by one.
Shorting will likely do well during a bear market but most long-short funds have much smaller short portfolios than long portfolios. For example they might be 75% long, 15% short and the rest in cash. However, given that most fund managers suck at stock picking the long portfolio might under-perform by so much that it overwhelms the profits from their short portfolio.
Currency trading is notoriously difficult and very few people can do well out of it in the long-term. Too many unknowns and variables involved.
Derivatives, apart from the people using derivatives for hedging, for the other participants its probably 90% + losing money and 10% of them making big profits. As for macro-investing I would say the odds of making a good return long-term are about the same as currency trading. Its very tough due to the complexity and number of unknowns and variables involved. That is why there are very few George Soroses (plus his politcal influence certainly can affect outcomes in some cases).
Yes during the start of the bet Buffett was losing to the hedge funds but one brief bear market period is not enough evidence to suggest that hedge funds reliably outperform in bear markets. We need to see a lot more evidence of this.
Also on the final paragraph Craft, you yourself are an accomplished active investor and you also promote passive investing for the majority of people, just as Buffett does. So how are you different from Buffett other than that you did not go out of your way to publicly humiliate the active funds management crowd?
We also find that some of the benefits of active management have been overlooked. Active managers:
• Hold companies to account
• Help to direct capital into faster-growing industries
• Work to improve standards of governance and make businesses more sustainable.
However, investors need to recognise that active performance is cyclical: selling out of a strategy with a strong philosophy and process after a short period of underperformance risks locking in that underperformance. But the potential value added from active management remains a critical tool in maximising return from a broad portfolio, and we believe that active management will in time start to regain share from passive.
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